40 research outputs found

    The Effect of Chaperonin Buffering on Protein Evolution

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    Molecular chaperones are highly conserved and ubiquitous proteins that help other proteins in the cell to fold. Pioneering work by Rutherford and Lindquist suggested that the chaperone Hsp90 could buffer (i.e., suppress) phenotypic variation in its client proteins and that alternate periods of buffering and expression of these variants might be important in adaptive evolution. More recently, Tokuriki and Tawfik presented an explicit mechanism for chaperone-dependent evolution, in which the Escherichia coli chaperonin GroEL facilitated the folding of clients that had accumulated structurally destabilizing but neofunctionalizing mutations in the protein core. But how important an evolutionary force is chaperonin-mediated buffering in nature? Here, we address this question by modeling the per-residue evolutionary rate of the crystallized E. coli proteome, evaluating the relative contributions of chaperonin buffering, functional importance, and structural features such as residue contact density. Previous findings suggest an interaction between codon bias and GroEL in limiting the effects of misfolding errors. Our results suggest that the buffering of deleterious mutations by GroEL increases the evolutionary rate of client proteins. We then examine the evolutionary fate of GroEL clients in the Mycoplasmas, a group of bacteria containing the only known organisms that lack chaperonins. We show that GroEL was lost once in the common ancestor of a monophyletic subgroup of Mycoplasmas, and we evaluate the effect of this loss on the subsequent evolution of client proteins, providing evidence that client homologs in 11 Mycoplasma species have lost their obligate dependency on GroEL for folding. Our analyses indicate that individual molecules such as chaperonins can have significant effects on proteome evolution through their modulation of protein folding

    Simulation vs. Reality: A Comparison of In Silico Distance Predictions with DEER and FRET Measurements

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    Site specific incorporation of molecular probes such as fluorescent- and nitroxide spin-labels into biomolecules, and subsequent analysis by Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) and double electron-electron resonance (DEER) can elucidate the distance and distance-changes between the probes. However, the probes have an intrinsic conformational flexibility due to the linker by which they are conjugated to the biomolecule. This property minimizes the influence of the label side chain on the structure of the target molecule, but complicates the direct correlation of the experimental inter-label distances with the macromolecular structure or changes thereof. Simulation methods that account for the conformational flexibility and orientation of the probe(s) can be helpful in overcoming this problem. We performed distance measurements using FRET and DEER and explored different simulation techniques to predict inter-label distances using the Rpo4/7 stalk module of the M. jannaschii RNA polymerase. This is a suitable model system because it is rigid and a high-resolution X-ray structure is available. The conformations of the fluorescent labels and nitroxide spin labels on Rpo4/7 were modeled using in vacuo molecular dynamics simulations (MD) and a stochastic Monte Carlo sampling approach. For the nitroxide probes we also performed MD simulations with explicit water and carried out a rotamer library analysis. Our results show that the Monte Carlo simulations are in better agreement with experiments than the MD simulations and the rotamer library approach results in plausible distance predictions. Because the latter is the least computationally demanding of the methods we have explored, and is readily available to many researchers, it prevails as the method of choice for the interpretation of DEER distance distributions

    Repression of RNA polymerase by the archaeo-viral regulator ORF145/RIP

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    Little is known about how archaeal viruses perturb the transcription machinery of their hosts. Here we provide the first example of an archaeo-viral transcription factor that directly targets the host RNA polymerase (RNAP) and efficiently represses its activity. ORF145 from the temperate Acidianus two-tailed virus (ATV) forms a high-affinity complex with RNAP by binding inside the DNA-binding channel where it locks the flexible RNAP clamp in one position. This counteracts the formation of transcription pre-initiation complexes in vitro and represses abortive and productive transcription initiation, as well as elongation. Both host and viral promoters are subjected to ORF145 repression. Thus, ORF145 has the properties of a global transcription repressor and its overexpression is toxic for Sulfolobus. On the basis of its properties, we have re-named ORF145 RNAP Inhibitory Protein (RIP)

    Protein Folding in Archaea: Analysis of the co-existing Group I and Group II chaperonins in M. mazei

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    Molecular mechanisms of RNA polymerase - the F/E (RPB4/7) complex is required for high processivity in vitro

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    Transcription elongation in vitro is affected by the interactions between RNA polymerase (RNAP) subunits and the nucleic acid scaffold of the ternary elongation complex (TEC, RNAP-DNA–RNA). We have investigated the role of the RNAP subunits F/E (homologous to eukaryotic RPB4/7) during transcription elongation and termination using a wholly recombinant archaeal RNAP and synthetic nucleic acid scaffolds. The F/E complex greatly stimulates the processivity of RNAP, it enhances the formation of full length products, reduces pausing, and increases transcription termination facilitated by weak termination signals. Mutant variants of F/E that are defective in RNA binding show that these activities correlate with the nucleic acid binding properties of F/E. However, a second RNA-binding independent component also contributes to the stimulatory activities of F/E. In summary, our results suggest that interactions between RNAP subunits F/E and the RNA transcript are pivotal to the molecular mechanisms of RNAP during transcription elongation and termination

    CD84 expression on human hematopoietic progenitor cells

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    OBJECTIVE: CD84 is a member of the CD2 subgroup of the immunoglobulin receptor superfamily. Members of this family have been implicated in the activation of T cells and NK cells. Expression of CD84 was originally described on most mononuclear blood cells as well as platelets. To elucidate its presence on other blood cell types, we analyzed the expression pattern of CD84 on human immature CD34+ and mature hematopoietic cells. METHODS: Expression analysis was carried out by flow cytometry. The differentiation potential of CD84+ progenitor cells was assessed by colony-forming assays and long-term cultures. RT-PCR was used to analyze CD84 mRNA isoforms. RESULTS: In addition to monocytes, macrophages, B cells, and some T cells, CD84 is expressed on the cell surface of the majority of granulocytes. In addition, 64%+/-5% of CD34+ progenitor cells isolated from peripheral blood and 30.5%+/-5% from bone marrow of healthy volunteers also express CD84. The majority of CD34+ cells coexpressing lineage antigens were CD84+. In methylcellulose CD34+CD84+ cells formed primarily erythroid colonies, whereas myeloid or mixed colonies were scarce. The frequency of long-term culture-initiating cells in peripheral blood was approximately fivefold higher in CD34+CD84- vs CD34+CD84+ cells. In short-term cultures, 95% of the initially CD34+CD84- cells became CD84+ after 72 hours. CONCLUSIONS: CD84 is expressed on cells from almost all hematopoietic lineages and on CD34+ hematopoietic progenitor cells. The proliferative potential of CD34+ cells decreases with increasing CD84 expression, suggesting that CD84 serves as a marker for committed hematopoietic progenitor cells
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